Becoming Mobius is about living with uncertainty. Uncertainty is a state of being that many people struggle with both in day-to-day life and in education; being uncertain has almost become a sin.
Becoming Mobius is about living with uncertainty. Uncertainty is a state of being that many people struggle with both in day-to-day life and in education; being uncertain has almost become a sin.
Becoming Mobius is about living with uncertainty. Uncertainty is a state of being that many people struggle with both in day-to-day life and in education; being uncertain has almost become a sin. If we are truly to have an education system that 'works', we need to accept that learning and life are not simple, and we need to engage with difficult and complex ideas.Focusing on the process of learning and teaching, Dr Debra Kidd posits the possibility that wondering and wandering teachers might impact greatly on a child's ability to live with and thrive among uncertainties. She asks of us, not only as teachers or researchers, but simply as human beings, what are the things that affect us, and how can we remain attuned to all their possibilities while still functioning?Taking cues from neuroscience, physics, anthropology and philosophy, particularly that of Gilles Deleuze and Felix Guattari, but also Hannah Arendt, Jacques Derrida, Michel Foucault and others, Dr Kidd explores the nature and purpose of education through a series of different lenses. Details, moments, interactions and relationships are put under the microscope and their effects on teaching and learning examined. Becoming Mobius started life as Debra Kidd's doctoral thesis and draws on her extensive classroom experience, her own observations and research, and a broad base of educational thought; including the work of Gert Biesta, Masny's Multiple Literacies and more.In Becoming Mobius each chapter is presented as a plateau and maps the complexities of teaching and learning. This is a journey through a landscape of education. It is not a straight route. It is not a cop-out. It is a means of living in, with and through complexity and multiplicity. It is an attempt to bring forward a fresh vision of education.This is an honest, challenging and incredibly profound book that makes you stop and think - deeply - about what you do, why you do it and the effect it has. You will never look at teaching in the same light again. For anyone interested in thinking deeply about education.
Debra Kidd's second book Becoming Mobius sees her stepping back from the afront line' of her first to inhabit a series of reflective, philosophical spaces. The ideas are complex and take some work to unpack, which is only appropriate given that complexity theory and its relevance to education is the book's central matter. However, one should not be put off by the folds and diffractions in time and space that we are asked to navigate, or the multiple alines of flight' that see Kidd move from reflections on personal professional struggles, to theoretical physics, to the philosophies of Deleuze and Guatarri that sit at the heart of the book. Kidd helps us to navigate complex ideas and disorientating lines of flight by anchoring them in the classroom, thus Deleuze' notion of achronos' and aaion' time are explored through a story of helping Danny with his spellings. Extracts from her journals are wonderfully lucid and their treatment unswervingly honest and compassionate. Kidd is clearly still a teacher at heart. Kidd argues that complexity and uncertainty are inherent within the process of learning. Rather than responding to this by reducing learning to a set of standardized outcomes, she encourages us to learn to alive with uncertaintya. Indeed it is within these moments of uncertainty that profound possibilities for learning emerge: avoid space is event space in which the pedagogical aim has not been athe transmission of the same, but the creation of the different'a. We see this in action in a school curriculum designed to engage students with questions for which there is no easy answer: aIs the world a fair place? What is a good person?a Relating to and understanding complex concepts takes precedence over getting the right answer. Within such a curriculum the notion of standardization becomes absurd and Kidd argues very powerfully, unjust. The blunt tools of high stakes testing and inspection do not help us make sense of these complex environments and processes. What gives Becoming Mobius its vitality is its humane and empowering approach to its subjects. Kidd steadfastly refuses to allow the voices of the students to become mere data asserting a[t]o be worthy, I need to make the children more than text a more than characters in a storya. In an education system obsessed by data it is refreshing to read a book that brings human beings back into the center of educational discourse.
Joe Harrison-Greaves, Co-Founder of Slow Education
In this compelling, conceptually-rich and moving book, Debra Kidd creates a unique engagement with the UK educational environment. Taking inspiration from the work of Gilles Deleuze and Felix Guattari, she uses insightful analyses of ethnographic data taken from her own classrooms to explore how experiences of uncertainty constitute the living material of educational practice. She shows how the fetishization of certainty, of a fixed stock of knowledge and avalues', constrains educational practice now more than ever before in the UK, thanks to increasingly centralized political control. Yet uncertainty, Kidd maintains, is not to be feared. It must instead be seen as a positive contribution to order, as the source of novelty, surprise and transformation. Through eight chapters presented as aplateaus', extended engagements with awkwardness, difficulty and antagonism in the classroom, she extracts from her experiences moments and encounters which exemplify learning in the sense articulated by Deleuze and Guattari, the amaking of sense from sensation'. Kidd shows with clarity, humour and verve how the classroom can become a site of small resistances that hold open the promise of different futures, multiple lines of flight shot through a deadening crust of compliance and conformity.
Dr Christopher Groves, Research Associate, Energy Biographies, School of Social Sciences, Cardiff University
The teaching manual is a form of book which has become increasingly popular in recent years. With its tips and menus of how to be a abrilliant' teacher, there is an assumption that careful replication of set principles should underpin the work of teachers. However both the ethical and the particular can become buried and lost in such narratives. Becoming Mobius, growing out of the philosophies of Deleuze and Guattari, instead emphasises the particular, the transient, the detail of the lived experience in education. It provokes the reader to consider the intricate networks of teaching from a series of alternative perspectives and in so doing, to reflect on their own assumptions about practice, ethics and beliefs. This book challenges us to think and reflect on what we value in education, not by telling us how we should act, but by sensitising us to the everyday complexity and experience of being a teacher.
Dr Philip Wood, Senior Lecturer, School of Education, University of Leicester
What matters in education? Randomised controlled trials have their origins in medical and agricultural research so awhat worksa discourses in education tend to rely on simplified and predictable input/output models of causality. These fail to capture the complex dynamics navigated in classrooms every day and they fail to communicate what matters in education a that is, what is significant for those involved. Kidd shows the pedagogical potential offered by unpredictable encounters in educational spaces. She describes some of the implications of policies and practices in schools that aim to eliminate unpredictability to ensure linear progress, measurable outcomes and control, drawing in particular upon the writings of philosophers Deleuze and Guattari. It isn't easy to find a way of mobilising concepts and theory creatively without losing the complexity and liveliness of educational practice. Kidd's efforts to think with difficult concepts don't always work, but she avoids the clumsy impositions of a conceptual framework that can too often plague the unreflective use of philosophical and theoretical concepts in educational research and policy. She also resists many of the presuppositions governing educational research in respect of reliability, validity, proof, and evidence. Her sensitivity to the nature of pedagogical practice and her desire to understand and explore significant, although unpredictable, moments of teaching and learning is worked through with data excerpts in each chapter to stimulate reflection. This inner dialogue of a teacher thinking through what it is she is doing underscores the text and makes it coherent. There are many humorous, insightful and wonderfully descriptive anecdotes that communicate something of the liveliness of education and the messiness of research, and one gets a strong sense of Kidd's relationships with her students and the complexities of life as a teacher. Moments like the wink she gives to her students, the words of the boy responding hesitantly to the theme of multiculturalism and immigration, or the difficult encounter between three boys when she feels excluded, all help to imagine education in terms of singular cases that don't fit comfortably beside one another, undoing the idea that every particular can be subsumed under a universal maxim. The tenor and energy of many of these stories will be familiar to practitioners, but may not be so for policymakers. Yet there are some problems with the book. Although the author is aware of the decisions she is making methodologically and structurally, in particular in relation to the non-linearity of the piece, it can dance too quickly between ideas and, at times, its meandering obscures any insights. It would have benefited from more waymarks to orientate the reader. Using the image of a map is fine but it helps to have some sense of where one is going and why. Eliminating some of the reflexivity and positionality, in particular in relation to the PhD process, would have focused it further, but the journal excerpts are terrific as are the descriptions. At times, I would have preferred more depth in terms of working through a number of the concepts, and I wondered how someone unfamiliar with this tradition of philosophical thought would cope with the array of ideas. This is not to say that Kidd is wrong in her interpretation of these philosophical ideas a many of her intuitions seem right to me a but rather greater elaboration would have been welcome. Notwithstanding these issues, it is very much worth reading. The examples are particularly engaging and Kidd does well in the difficult task of inviting an interplay of ideas and practice, rather than privileging one over the other.
Aislinn O Donnell, for Schools Week
Debra Kidd was born in a house with an outside toilet and remembers her dad studying and moving their family to bigger houses with inside bathrooms: a living example of the value of education. She taught for twenty one years in all phases of education and has a Doctorate in Education. She lives in the north of England.
Becoming Mobius is about living with uncertainty. Uncertainty is a state of being that many people struggle with both in day-to-day life and in education; being uncertain has almost become a sin. If we are truly to have an education system that 'works', we need to accept that learning and life are not simple, and we need to engage with difficult and complex ideas. Focusing on the process of learning and teaching, Dr Debra Kidd posits the possibility that wondering and wandering teachers might impact greatly on a child's ability to live with and thrive among uncertainties. She asks of us, not only as teachers or researchers, but simply as human beings, what are the things that affect us, and how can we remain attuned to all their possibilities while still functioning?Taking cues from neuroscience, physics, anthropology and philosophy, particularly that of Gilles Deleuze and Felix Guattari, but also Hannah Arendt, Jacques Derrida, Michel Foucault and others, Dr Kidd explores the nature and purpose of education through a series of different lenses. Details, moments, interactions and relationships are put under the microscope and their effects on teaching and learning examined. Becoming Mobius started life as Debra Kidd's doctoral thesis and draws on her extensive classroom experience, her own observations and research, and a broad base of educational thought; including the work of Gert Biesta, Masny's Multiple Literacies and more.In Becoming Mobius each chapter is presented as a plateau and maps the complexities of teaching and learning. This is a journey through a landscape of education. It is not a straight route. It is not a cop-out. It is a means of living in, with and through complexity and multiplicity. It is an attempt to bring forward a fresh vision of education.This is an honest, challenging and incredibly profound book that makes you stop and think - deeply - about what you do, why you do it and the effect it has. You will never look at teaching in the same light again. For anyone interested in thinking deeply about education.
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